Rolfe
Adult human female
The point that seems to be missing here is that nobody "took the guns away" because they weren't there in the first place.
Rolfe.
Rolfe.
Oh dear, the list keeps growing, doesn't it? Now pump-action, semi-automatics, automatics, and handguns are banned. No gun is allowed for self-protection.Semi-automatics too, correct. So no pump action shotguns. Generally speaking you don't need them to (say) hunt grouse.
I see, so it's all about semantics. If they took them away so long ago nobody (by that I mean "very few") has them today you can claim that "nobody took our guns away".The point that seems to be missing here is that nobody "took the guns away" because they weren't there in the first place.
Rolfe.
I see, so it's all about semantics. If they took them away so long ago nobody (by that I mean "very few") has them today you can claim that "nobody took our guns away".
So handgns were banned. And you have to prove you have a "reason" to own other guns - and I note personal and home protecton isn't one of them you listed. Is it legal to keep a loaded gun in your home?
...snip...
I see, so it's all about semantics. If they took them away so long ago nobody (by that I mean "very few") has them today you can claim that "nobody took our guns away".
The point that seems to be missing here is that nobody "took the guns away" because they weren't there in the first place.
Rolfe.
Not quite. If they took them away so long ago that nobody owning a gun at the time is still living now, then yes, we can quite honestly claim that nobody took our guns away.
Michael Ryan’s fixation with weaponry might have made him something of an exception in Hungerford. But he was by no means unusual in terms of the country as a whole. For in the summer of 1987 Britain’s gun culture was very widespread indeed. Ryan was just one among 160,000 licensed holders of firearms and 840,000 licensed holders of shotguns. However, the number of shotguns in legitimate circulation at that time was estimated at around three times that number, because several could be held on a single licence. And according to an estimate published in the Police Review there were then possibly as many as four million illegally held guns in the country. Gun shops and gun centres were also widespread, with more than two thousand legitimate dealers trading in arms, many extremely successfully, and some eight thousand gun clubs where the enthusiast could hone his skills.
In his love for guns, then, Michael Ryan was not alone. So when he applied to join the Dunmore Shooting Centre at Abingdon in Oxfordshire in September 1986, there was nothing particularly remarkable in his application. For Ryan membership of the Dunmore club was particularly attractive because it incorporated what it claimed was one of the biggest gun shops in the country. Ryan proved to be a good customer, spending £391.50 on a Beretta pistol shortly before Christmas 1986, and then buying a Smith and Wesson for £325, a Browning shotgun, a Bernadelli pistol and two other shotguns during the following year. Ryan borrowed the money to finance these transactions, a Reading finance company handling his repeated applications for funds.
There was more besides to attract the young gun enthusiast, for the Dumnore Centre’s shooting gallery had a 25-metre, fullboard, seven-lane range with television-monitored targets. The Centre, situated not far from Ryan’s home, also had a turning-target system, enabling him to practice rapid fire and combat exercises, an area of gun expertise known as practical shooting. Here, accuracy is tested not on Bisley-style targets where closeness to the bull’s-eye gains the most marks, but under simulated combat conditions, firing at representational figures, usually life-sized depictions of terrorists. The aim here is to kill or maim the ‘enemy’. In the summer of 1987 there were no fewer than forty ‘survival schools’ scattered around Britain, and magazines like Desert Eagle, Combat and Survival, Soldier of Fortune and Survival Weaponry were then enjoying a rapidly rising circulation. Michael Ryan was simply one of the gun-loving crowd.
Such renderings are the heart and soul of both sides of the gun control debates....would be a grossly inaccurate rendering of the actual position.
Well, you know the first thing the communists do when they take over a country is confiscate all the privately owned guns. I keep a rod buried behind the garage… just in case.
Unlucky, that it the wrong answer, never mind lets have a look at what you could have won.So apparently there is no gun ban in the UK, except for the 98% of the population the state decides doesn't "need" a gun? Need, of course, defined by the state.
In the UK our society has never involved the idea that having a gun is somehow a right, we are just not interested (as a whole) in creating this right.
I likes my guns evil, accessible, and plentiful. You likes 'em nonexistent.
Such renderings are the heart and soul of both sides of the gun control debates. .... You likes 'em nonexistent.
Nope. Ammunition has to be stored separately I believe.